Monthly Archives: May 2016

Hollywood Communications

Are you reading this article on a cell phone? Maybe you’re on the wifi at a local coffee shop. Well, this article, and anything else you browse while waiting for your frappuccino, is delivered to your mobile device thanks to a 1940’s Hollywood starlet. Digital communications wouldn’t exist without the elegant brilliance of Hedy Lamarr, another prominent woman in science.

Samson_and_Delilah_original_1949_posterAustrian born, Hedy Lamarr debuted in America opposite Charles Boyer in the 1938 film Algiers [1]. She became a sensation thanks in large part to her beauty, working with Hollywood headliners like Clark Gable, Jimmy Stewart, and Judy Garland. Her biggest success was her titlular role in Samson and Delilah, the highest grossing film of 1949 [2]. But Hollywood started to typecast Hedy as the seductress—roles that required very little beyond looking pretty. Bored with her acting career, Hedy switched to inventing [3].

Her first few inventions were flops, including a tablet to automatically carbonate water (which Hedy admitted made the drink taste like alka seltzer) [3]. Then she focused on military inventions to help the Allies in WWII. At a dinner party, Hedy met composer George Anthiel, and chatted about radio communications used to control torpedoes [1]. These signals could easily be intercepted or jammed by the enemy, but Hedy realized that randomly changing the frequency of the transmission might make radio communications harder to decipher.  The two started working on a “frequency-hopping” procedure they later patented [4].

Pianola_paper_tape.JPG

Source: Krzysztof S pl / Wikimedia Commons

Hedy and George’s ‘frequency-hopping’ system was inspired by paper piano rolls, where up to 88 perforations in a roll of paper control which keys are played on self-playing pianos. But instead of playing a song, the paper rolls would control the frequency of the radio message. Transmitting and receiving stations would synchronize identical paper rolls, allowing communications to hop between frequencies seemingly at random [4]. With the transmitter and receiver hopping frequencies to the tune of Camptown Races, the Nazis wouldn’t be able to lock in on a signal to intercept communications or jam the frequency.

Hedy and George’s invention was never used in WWII, but it was adopted for military communications during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Later, Hedy and George’s invention would form the basis of secure digital communications via satellite, wifi, and cellular phones [5].

Hedy_lamarr_-_1940

Each of these mobile devices trades something akin to an electronic piano roll, to sync their communications and prevent interference between signals.

This technology wasn’t widely adopted until after their patent expired, so Hedy didn’t strike it rich in the digital age. But she was recognized for her invention in 1997 with an Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) Pioneer Award and was the first female recipient of a BULBIE Gnass Spirit of Achievement Award [5].

Hedy once said “Any girl can be glamorous; all you have to do is stand around and look stupid” [1]. Lucky for the internet, it was all an act.


References
[1] “Hedy Lamarr Biography“. Biography.com. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
[2] Barton, Ruth (2010). Hedy Lamarr: The Most Beautiful Woman in Film. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 9780813126104.
[3] “‘Most Beautiful Woman’ By Day, Inventor By Night”. NPR. 22 November 2011.
[4] “Patent 2,292,387“. United States Patent and Trademark Office. Filed 10 June 1941. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
[5] “Hedy Lamarr – Invention of Spread Specturm Technology“. Famous Women Inventors. Retrieved 22 May 2016.

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Tongue-in-Cheek

20080216225147!Rolled_tongue_flikr

Source: Hmwith / Wikimedia Commons

Can you roll your tongue? I can. Most people can. It’s often presented as an example of a genetic trait, but don’t be fooled. It’s possible for maternal twins to differ in their tongue rolling abilities, even though maternal twins are supposed to be genetically identical [1]. Myth busted.

Sorry to disappoint. This post isn’t about the tongue rolling gene (rolled oral factor lingua, or ROFL). Maybe a few genes combine to give us the power to make the tongue tube, possibly genes that offer better muscle control or flexibility. The tongue is a weird muscle too—wiggling around in there, fiddling with that rough spot on your tooth—and it achieves that wiggling and fiddling thanks to this week’s gene of interest: myosin or MYH1.

Muscles can only pull, never push [2]. Think about that for a second. We can achieve so many artful and dexterous movements (fencing, the tango, punching someone in the face) and manage it entirely by a timely contraction of a series of tissues to achieve the desired effect. To me, that’s mind blowing. Even pushing achieved through pulling.

Push by Pulling

Muscles pull by way of two proteins, actin and myosin, that work together in a chemical tug-of-war [3]. Actin is the rope and myosin is the hand that pulls on that rope.  Myosin attaches to actin and (using energy from ATP) pulls on actin sliding it forward. Actomyosin

Muscle is organized into groups of parallel actin and myosin fibers called sarcomeres [3].  Each muscle has millions of sarcomeres—millions upon millions of molecules pulling against one another to create force.

Pitting muscles against each other, antagonistic pairs, gives us movement. For example, the bicep and the tricep (Did you get your tickets to the gun show? flexes bicep). In the tongue, several antagonistic pairs are woven together, both parallel and perpendicular to the surface. They pull against each other in a soft mass, with anchor points in the jaw, mandible, and the front and back of the throat [4]. And a few of those pairs combine to pull off the tongue roll. What a weird thing to have inside our mouths.  Enjoy being aware your tongue for the next hour!


References
[1] “Debunking the Biggest Genetic Myth of the Human Tongue“. PBS. 5 August 2015.
[2] “Why Do Muscles Only Pull And Not Push“. ezinearticles.com. 13 August 2012.
[3] “How Muscle Works“. How Stuff Works. 11 April 2001.
[4] “Anatomy Angel: The Tongue and Balance“. Dr. Dooley Noted. 30 October 2014.

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Doo-W0p DNA

Sorry for my absence this past month.  A new teaching gig has been eating up all my time.  But work is slowing down, so I should have a new post soon.

In the meantime, I thought I’d share this video from SciShow, a vlog that’s a favorite around the Allen household.  Their videos combine science with a sense of humor (a style I awkwardly try to replicate at G of I).  Their video below describes “musical genes”, genes that control your musical aptitude.  Check out the rest of their videos at this link: https://www.youtube.com/user/scishow.

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